Fun Facts: Animals
"All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others."
—George Orwell
For more
interesting facts about animals, see
Animals #2 and
Animals #3
A northeastern spotted dolphin.
Aristotle noticed that dolphins give birth to live young who were
attached to their mothers by umbilical cords, so
he classified dolphins as mammals in Generation of Animals. Not until the nineteenth century did modern science confirm his statement.
(source)
There is only one recorded battle in which both sides used elephants.
In the Fourth Syrian War, in 217 B.C., Antiochus III of Syria used
Asian elephants when attacking Ptolemy IV's Egyptian army with its
smaller North African elephants (now extinct). While the Asian
elephants were victorious, the Egyptian army would go on to win a
smashing victory at Raphia on the Egyptian border.
(source)
According to Roman historian Suetonius, it was rumoured that
one consul and coregent of Rome was a horse - Emperor Caligula's
favourite, Incitatus, who was accorded honour at every turn. Caligula's
successor, Claudius, did not invite Incitatus in to dine, as had
Caligula, but the horse was still decently treated, in his ivory manger,
with a golden drinking goblet for partaking of wine.
(source)
Horses were not commonly used for farm work until the twelfth
century, because the chest harness in use since Roman times was
inefficient. The invention of the shoulder harness, the "horse collar,"
enabled them to pull much greater weights, such as farm implements.
(source)
The fourth Moghul Emperor, Jahangir, who ruled from 1605 to 1627,
had a harem of 300 royal wives, 5,000 more women, and 1,000
young men for alternate pleasures. His stables contained
12,000 elephants, 10,000 oxen, 2,000 camels,
3,000 deer, 4,000 dogs, 100 tame lions, 500 buffalo, and 10,000
carrier pigeons.
(source)
Lord Byron kept a pet bear at Cambridge University because
dogs were not allowed.
A well-intentioned philanthropist, Eugene Scheifflin, instituted a
project in the 1890s to bring to America each type of bird mentioned
in the works of Shakespeare. As Hotspur talks about the starling in
Henry IV, Part I, starlings were let loose in New York's
Central Park. There are now millions of starlings throughout all of
North America.
(source)
The Dingo is the only wild, meat-eating animal native to Australia.
Until recently, the only purple animal known was the blesbok, a small
South African antelope. However, in 2003 a small purple frog was discovered in
Western India. It spends most of the year up to 12 feet underground, which is
why it was not discovered earlier.
(source)
The Wake Island rail was only discovered in 1903 and was extinct
by 1946. It was wiped out when the island was occupied during
World War II by Japanese soldiers, who found it a tasty delicacy.
The only wild horses in the world are Przewalski's horses, from
Mongolia. Although they became extinct in the wild in 1968, they
have since been re-introduced to their native Mongolia.
All other horse breeds are descended from horses that
were once domesticated.
A group of magpies is called a tiding, one of ravens an unkindness,
one of turtledoves a pitying, one of starlings a murmuration, one of
swans a lamentation, one of ponies a string, one of rattlesnakes a
rhumba, one of crows a murder, one of cobras a quiver, one of foxes a
skulk, one of emus a mob, one of elks a gang, one of cats a clowder,
one of flamingoes a pat,
and one of bears a sleuth.
Groups of geese are named in a peculiar manner; when they are on the
ground they are called a "gaggle", but in the air they are called a
"skein".
(source)
The eye of an ostrich is larger than its brain.
Some crabs near Danno-ura in Japan have patterns on their shells bearing
an uncanny resemblance to a face of a samurai. When caught, these crabs are
thrown back in commemoration of the Heike samurai clan, who lost a naval
battle there in 1185. The patterns on the crabs' shells are inherited, and
it is believed that the patterns evolved because fishermen tended to throw
back crabs with patterns resembling faces. So, crabs with patterns that most
resembled a face had a better chance of survival. Eventually, the pattern of
the face of a fierce, scowling samurai evolved.
(source)
The passenger pigeon, which became extinct on September 1st, 1914,
when the Cincinnati zoo's specimen, Martha, died, was the most abundant bird in
the world in the nineteenth century and the most abundant ever in North America.
Scottish-American ornithologist Alexander Wilson once watched a
250-mile-long flock pass over his Kentucky home for two whole days.
In 1813, naturalist John James Audubon saw a
flock that flew past at an estimated 300 million birds per hour for
three days, blotting out the sun.
However, due to vigourous hunting and destruction of their habitat, by
the 1860s the birds had disappeared from the American east coast and were
quickly disappearing everywhere else.
The last big pigeon hunt took place in 1878 near Petoskey, Michigan, killing
one thousand million birds.
The last wild passenger pigeon
was shot in St. Vincent, Quebec, on September 23rd, 1907.
In 1909, a reward of $1,500 was offered for information on a nesting
pair, but none were found.
(source)
A frozen woolly mammoth was found on the banks of the Beresovka
River, in Siberia, that was almost in a complete state of preservation.
Investigating scientists were able to eat its meat, and
buttercups were found in the creature's mouth.
(source)
Winnie-the-Pooh is based on a real bear. On August 24th, 1914,
a Canadian soldier and veterinarian named Harry Colebourn, en route
to a training camp in Valcartier, Quebec, purchased an orphaned black
bear cub for $20 in White River, Ontario, which he named Winnipeg,
or Winnie for short. When his unit was sent over to France during World
War I, Colebourn loaned her to the London Zoo, intending to take her back
to Canada after the war. However, Winnie's gentle disposition made her
the zoo's top attraction, and on December 1, 1919, he donated her to the zoo.
In the mid 1920's, writer A. A. Milne often took his young son,
Christopher Robin, to the zoo, and Christopher named his teddy bear
"Winnie-the-Pooh" after Winnie. A. A. Milne went on to write several
best-selling children's books about Christopher Robin and Winnie-the-Pooh.
Apart from humans, the Asian elephant is the only mammal that can
stand on its head.
A cockroach can live without its head for over a week, until it dies
due to lack of food or water.
The coelacanth, a member of a group of fishes that existed 350
million years ago, is still alive. It lives off the shores of
southern Africa. It was thought to be extinct until 1938, when
fishermen off the coast of South Africa caught one.
From 1890 to 1900, 20 tons of ivory taken from the remains of
woolly mammoths were shipped each year from Siberia to London.
In Barnsley, England, in 1984, Percy the Chihuahua accompanied his
owner, Christine Harrison, on a visit to her parents' home. Percy
refused to stay in the yard, darting into the street, where he was
hit by a car. The dog displayed no signs of life, so Christine asked
her father to bury her pet. Percy was put in a heavy paper sack and
entombed in a two-foot-deep grave in the garden.
However, Mick, a terrier belonging to Christine's parents, refused
to leave the grave. He dug up Percy dragged him to the house, and
stimulated his circulation by licking him. Percy was still unconscious
but now had a faint heartbeat, and he eventually recovered.
Interestingly enough, Percy and Mick hated each other, and continued
to do so after this incident.